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Diko says Anastasiades perjured himself before passports enquiry

Diko says Anastasiades perjured himself before passports enquiry

 

President 12

 

 

In a further escalation of a bitter row over Cyprus’ golden passports, Diko on Friday said revelations about President Nicos Anastasiades’ Seychelles holidays indicate he had not told the whole truth to a committee of inquiry probing the citizenship-by-investment scheme and as such may have perjured himself.

In a written statement, Diko president Nicholas Papadopoulos said he would suggest to the House Watchdog Committee that it write to the attorney general and the chairman of the inquiry panel, informing them of the situation so that they can decide what to do next.

Diko has been locked in a bitter row with the president over the now defunct passport scheme, saying he has refused to hand over the files requested by the auditor general because he feared transparency.

The row has recently homed in on the president’s relationship with a Saudi businessman who was granted Cyprus citizenship and whose airplane the president had used.

On Thursday civil aviation officials told the House Watchdog Committee that a flight under presidential designation to the Seychelles did take place in August 2015 but could not say whether the president himself was on board.

Director of the President’s Office Petros Demetriou and cabinet secretary Theodosis Tsiolas declined to say whether Anastasiades was on the Boeing 767-200 flight to and from the Seychelles and suggested MPs submit a question in writing.

Anastasiades has not denied travelling to the Seychelles on holiday in August 2015, but says it was a private flight which he paid out of his own pocket. He has also said he went on a family holiday to the Seychelles in 2018 and that in this case the aircraft belonged to the Saudi businessman who paid for the trip as a gesture but ‘not a gift’.

The second wife of the Saudi businessman was granted citizenship in August 2015, a case flagged both by the auditor general and the ad hoc committee looking into high-risk naturalisations as Cyprus law does not provide for the naturalisation of second spouses or polygamy.

In his statement on Friday Papadopoulos said the Seychelles saga leaves the president highly exposed.

He said a simple search shows that the Boeing 767 which flew the president in 2015 was operated by the same company that flew him for free in 2018.

“It is clear that Nicos Anastasiades did not tell the whole truth to the Nicolatos [CBI] committee of inquiry. He did not reveal, as he should have, that he had travelled a second time in 2015 to the Seychelles on the jet of the specific Saudi,” he said.

“If it emerges that the specific trip was offered for free or on favourable terms, then Nicos Anastasiades has committed perjury before the Nicolatos committee of inquiry, as he had claimed under oath that he had travelled to the Seychelles at his own cost,” Papadopoulos added.

Papadopoulos said the president must give an explanation within 24 hours and apologise to the people of Cyprus.

Meanwhile, police are due later on Friday to issue clarifications regarding statements attributed to the police chief that two members of the presidential guard had travelled with the president to the Seychelles in August 2015.

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